Many Secretly Use Alternative Meds For Cancer

By | April 11, 2019

By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, April 11, 2019 (HealthDay News) — One out of every three U.S. cancer patients uses alternative or complementary therapies, but many keep that info from their doctors, a new study finds.

That’s a real concern, the study’s lead author said, especially when it comes to supplements and cancer radiation therapy.

“You don’t know what’s in them,” said Dr. Nina Sanford, assistant professor of radiation oncology at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

“Some of these supplements are kind of a mishmash of different things,” she said. “Unless we know what’s in them, I would recommend patients avoid using them during radiation because there’s likely not data on certain supplements, which could interfere with treatment. With radiation specifically, there is concern that very high levels of antioxidants could make radiation less effective.”

The new study looked at U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data on over 3,100 cancer patients. Sanford’s team found that herbal supplements were the most common complementary and alternative therapy used by cancer patients, followed by chiropractic.

Other therapies include meditation, yoga and acupuncture.

The study also found that 29% of patients who use complementary and alternative therapies did not tell their doctor.

“Younger patients are more likely to use complementary and alternative medicines, and women were more likely to, but I would have thought more people would tell their doctors,” Sanford said in a UT Southwestern news release.

Why the secrecy? Many patients said they didn’t inform their doctors because their doctors didn’t ask, or because they thought their doctors didn’t need to know they were using alternative or complementary therapies.

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But physicians do need to know if cancer patients are using herbal products because they can alter traditional cancer treatments, explained Dr. David Gerber. He is a lung cancer specialist and professor of internal medicine and population and data sciences at UT Southwestern Medical Center.

“They may interact with the medicines we’re giving them, and through that interaction it could alter the level of the medicine in the patient,” he said in the news release. “If the levels get too high, then toxicities increase, and if the levels get too low, the efficacy would drop.”

Continued

Dr. John Ames directs radiation medicine at Northwell Health’s Imbert Cancer Center in Bay Shore, N.Y. He wasn’t involved in the new study, but said the findings ring true.

“As a practicing radiation oncologist for nearly 30 years, I have witnessed the evolution — indeed, revolution — of alternative health practices, such as the healing arts of meditation, yoga and the like, and the use of herbals and supplements among cancer patients,” he said.

Ames believes the use of these therapies has now “become mainstream in our society.”

“Anecdotally, I am asked by at least half of my patients, ‘can I take,’ ‘should I take,’ ‘is it OK if I am taking supplements’ while undergoing conventional cancer therapies,” he noted.

Ames urges his patients to be upfront about whatever complementary medicines they might be taking.

“If supplements/herbals/nutraceuticals are to be used, I caution my patients to obtain them from reputable sources and do their homework, which includes asking questions from knowledgeable individuals,” he said. Patients should also “be wary of the financial toxicity of expensive supplements with overblown or little, to no, real benefit,” he added.

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Sanford added that, while wary of herbal products, doctors are open to meditation and yoga to help patients cope with the shock of a cancer diagnosis and the stress of chemotherapy, radiation and surgery.

“We strongly advise patients to stay active and engage in exercise during treatment,” Sanford said. “A common side effect of radiation is fatigue. I let the patients know that the patients who feel the most fatigue are the ones who are the most sedentary, and that those who are doing exercise are the ones who frequently have the most energy.”

Ames agreed.

He said he typically advises his patients “to eat and drink healthy, nutritious food (the specifics of which are outlined by the nutritionists on our staff); to stay well-hydrated; stay active (exercise) within their ability; and to engage in relaxing, calming, restorative activities as often as possible — quality sleep being chief among them.”

The study was published online April 11 in the journal JAMA Oncology.

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Sources

SOURCES: John W. Ames, M.D., physician in chief, department of radiation medicine, Northwell Health’s Imbert Cancer Center, Bay Shore, N.Y.; UT Southwestern Medical Center, news release, April 11, 2019

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